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Elliott Landy, born in 1942, began photographing the anti-Vietnam
war movement and the underground music culture in New
York City in 1967.
He photographed many of the underground rock and roll superstars,
both backstage and onstage, from 1967 to 69.
His images of Bob Dylan
and The Band, Janis
Joplin, Jimi Hendrix,
Jim Morrison,
Joan Baez, Van
Morrison, Richie
Havens, and many others documented the music scene during
that classic rock and roll period which culminated with the
1969 Woodstock Festival,
of which he was the official photographer.
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After
that, Elliott moved on to other inspirations and art forms,
photographing his own children and travels, creating impressionist
flower photographs and doing motion and kaleidoscopic
photography in both still and film formats.
His photographs have been published worldwide for many years
in all print mediums including covers of Rolling Stone,
Life, the Saturday Evening Post, etc. and album
covers, calendars, photographic book collections, etc.
He
has published Woodstock Vision, The Spirit
of A Generation, in book and CD-ROM
format, and authored the book Woodstock 69, The First
Festival.
He
is currently publishing a series of limited edition lithographs
of his classic rock photographs...
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